Parrish USA250 Announces ‘Sanford BIGGERS: DRIFT’ w/ Site Specific Installation May 17 – Sept 13th

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THE PARRISH ART MUSEUM ANNOUNCES

SANFORD BIGGERS: DRIFT 

The artist’s first major East End solo show, featuring site-specific installations and key  works,

presented as part of PARRISH USA250 marking the nation’s 250th anniversary 

May 17–September 13, 2026 

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Sanford Biggers (American, b. 1970), Dagu (2016). Antique quilts, assorted textiles, mixed media, 50” × 151 ½” × 5” Museum of Arts and Design, New York; purchase with funds provided by the Collections Committee, 2018.5 

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 The Parrish Art Museum presents Sanford Biggers: Drift,  marking the acclaimed artist’s first major solo presentation on the East End of Long Island,  a place of deep importance to Biggers. The exhibition will feature new work and site responsive installations alongside signature sculptures and textile works. 

Sanford Biggers: Drift is part of the museum’s exhibition series recognizing America’s semi quincentennial in 2026, PARRISH USA250: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, a  yearlong presentation of exhibitions and programs exploring the core ideals of the  Declaration of Independence through the East End of Long Island’s enduring role in  shaping American creativity and identity. The series reflects on the nation’s founding values, examines our present moment, and imagines new paths forward, while recognizing  the significant contributions of Long Island artists to American art and culture. Through this  exhibition, Sanford Biggers explores the PARRISH USA250 theme of “Pursuit of  Happiness.” 

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“Sanford Biggers: Drift invites all of us to reflect on the enduring promise, and the  complexity, of the pursuit of happiness as we mark the 250th anniversary of the United  States. We are proud to present this dynamic exhibition as part of the PARRISH USA250 series and to welcome the community to explore and experience Sanford Biggers’ first museum exhibition on the East End during this important milestone in our nation,” said Dr.  Mónica Ramírez-Montagut, Executive Director of the Parrish Art Museum.  

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“I am delighted to work with Sanford Biggers to create an ambitious exhibition at the  Parrish this summer. The different yet complementary elements of Drift—highlighting both  the unique materiality of his textile, painting, and sculpture work as well as the ephemeral  and almost performative aspect of his room installations—will transform the museum  galleries into something well beyond a viewing space and invite visitors to come together  for contemplation and reverie,” said Corinne Erni, The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief  Curator of Art and Education. 

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Fascinated by the way that materials and symbols become charged with spiritual, cultural,  and personal significance, Sanford Biggers (b. 1970, Los Angeles, CA) draws on a diverse  range of influences, from Buddhism and Los Angeles graffiti culture to Gee’s Bend quilts  and his own collection of African sculpture, as well as his connection to Sag Harbor.  Working across painting, installation, sculpture, video, and performance, Biggers  describes his practice as emerging from an aggregate process of “transposing, combining,  and juxtaposing ideas, forms, and genres that challenge traditional historiography.” 

Sanford Biggers: Drift traces the multidisciplinary nature of Biggers’ work through the motif  of the cloud, a symbol that has engaged the artist for decades. Controlled by the unseen  energy of the wind, these nebulous forms are shaped and re-shaped by air currents as they  move across the sky. Themes of fluctuation and adaptability run throughout the exhibition,  beginning with the artist’s recent monumental installation Unsui (Cloud Forest) (2025), a  series of illuminated cloud sculptures that draw on Japanese, European, and American art  traditions and will be suspended from the largest gallery’s arched ceiling. Inspired by his  time spent in Japan in the early 1990s, the work’s title derives from a Japanese term that  likens the drifting nature of clouds to the Zen Buddhist philosophy of moving through the  world without attachment or resistance to change. 

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“As we look into the clouds, we often see very different things from one person to the  next,” Biggers explains. “I think that is similar to the way people perceive America. The  ideals and values might be different from one person to the next—sometimes clearly  visible, sometimes a little hazy or hard to find—but always worth looking for and striving  for.” Sanford Biggers: Drift reminds us that contemplating the clouds is not a frivolous  activity, but an invitation to reflect on nature and the power of change.  

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“Cultural symbols and their coded meanings are at the heart of Biggers’ work. Playing with  the cloud’s myriad spiritual, emotional, artistic, and poetic interpretations, Biggers adds  further undertones with his materials choices, rendering the symbol in everything from raw  cotton and dripping paint to tessellated metallic surfaces that flicker in light and wind,”  says Scout Hutchinson, The FLAG Art Foundation Associate Curator of Contemporary Art  at the Parrish. “In Drift, Biggers presents us with an ever-shifting, ambiguous form that  blurs distinct edges—the selfsame qualities that define his work.”

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The exhibition will feature examples from Biggers’ ongoing Codex series—sculptures and  paintings made from repurposed antique quilts—that feature spray-painted cumulus  cloud forms, a nod to Biggers’ teenage years as a graffiti artist. The Codex works reference  the legend of “quilt codes,” said to have guided freedom seekers along the Underground  Railroad; though historians have debated this narrative, it remains a potent metaphor for  perseverance and liberation.  

In an adjacent gallery, Biggers will create a new site-specific sand installation inspired by  prayer rugs, portable breakdance floors, and Japanese Buddhist mandala. Initially laid out  in a precise geometric design, the sand is unfixed and can be disrupted by its environment  over the course of the exhibition, softening its edges into a painterly “blur.” This gesture of  movement and transformation appears in his Codex works, where the quilted pattern will  appear rippled, as if stirred by air.  

Installed in the Parrish’s South Meadow, Biggers’ 24-foot-wide-by-16-foot-tall outdoor  sculpture Of many waters… (2022) will greet visitors and passersby on Montauk Highway. A  continuation of his Chimera, Shimmer, and Codex series, the hybridized figure combines  an archetype of a European reclining male figure with a 19th-Century Baule double-face  mask assembled from metal sequins. 

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Upcoming Programs 

Saturday, May 16, 5-7 PM | Members Opening Reception & Artist Talk open to the public (5:30 PM) 

Sunday, June 14, 11 AM–5 PM | Community Day | All-day free admission & activities,  including program with Sanford Biggers 

Friday, July 24, 3 PM | Curator-Led Tour of Sanford Biggers: Drift 

Sunday, August 16, 11 AM | Artist Panel  

Friday, September 4, 6-8 PM | Members Closing Reception & Artist-Led Tour open to the  public (7 PM) 

Find more high-resolution images in this folder. 

Sanford Biggers: Drift is co-organized by Corinne Erni, The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman  Chief Curator of Art and Education, and Scout Hutchinson, The FLAG Art Foundation  Associate Curator of Contemporary Art. 

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Exhibition Support 

Sanford Biggers: Drift is made possible, in part, thanks to the generous support of The Coby  Foundation, LTD; Robert Lehman Foundation; Sarah Arison; Amy and Steven Horowitz;  Sarika Singh and Vivek Bantwal, Goldman Sachs Gives; George Wells and Manfred  Rantner; Susan and Frank Dunlevy; Miyoung Lee & Neil Simpkins; The Lumpkin-Boccuzzi  Family; Aima Raza and Agha Khan; Robin and Frederic Seegal; Jane Wesman and Donald  Savelson; Martha McLanahan; Suzi and David Cordish; Stephanie Horton; and Marjorie and  Michael Levine.

We are also grateful for the in-kind support provided by Marianne Boesky Gallery, New  York, and David Castillo Gallery, Miami. 

The Parrish Art Museum’s programs are made possible, in part, by the New York State  Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State  Legislature, and by the property taxpayers from the Southampton School District and the  Tuckahoe Common School District. 

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The Parrish Art Museum is a place to discover and connect with artists and art with a focus  on the rich creative legacy of the East End and its global impact on the art world. Inspired  by the natural setting and historical artistic community of Long Island’s East End, the  Parrish Art Museum celebrates its legacy through a distinctive contemporary lens and  socially conscious global context. The Parrish illuminates the creative process and how  art, architecture, and design transform our experiences and our communities, and how we  relate to the world. Access to relevant cultural engagement, artistic inspiration, a natural  environment, and architectural ingenuity characterizes the Museum experience as a  unique destination for the region, the nation, and the world.

Visit www.parrishart.org for more information.

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By |2026-04-22T10:10:02-04:00April 22nd, 2026|Bulletins, East End, East End Museum Exhibitions, Exhibits|Comments Off on Parrish USA250 Announces ‘Sanford BIGGERS: DRIFT’ w/ Site Specific Installation May 17 – Sept 13th